Less than the Least

It Is What It Is--Skeel

I first heard this expression two years or so ago, when a poet friend in New York used it. It reminded me a little of Bill Clinton’s disquisition on the word “is,” and much more of a little poem by Galway Kinnell which managed to squeeze three “is’s” into a single three word line. (The poem, “Prayer,” I think in its entirety, is: “Whatever what/is is is/what I want. Only that. But that”)

I quite like the expression in small doses. Used once in a conversation, “It is what it is” seems to me to suggest a clear-eyed acceptance of complexity that doesn’t pretend that every difficulty has an easy solution. Used more than once in the same conversation, it quickly becomes annoying.

Tags:

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
https://apps.law.upenn.edu/weblog/mt-tb.cgi/2337

About

We are both law professors and evangelical Protestants – a weird
combination in our time. We hope it’s also an interesting combination.
We plan to write about the things that interest us, professionally and
personally: crime and criminal justice (Stuntz), corporate governance,
credit, and bankruptcy (Skeel), the culture wars, politics, literature
and the arts, and other topics.